Take a look at some of the really Interesting facts about Queen Elizabeth II
1. Queen Elizabeth II is the
fortieth monarch since William the Conqueror obtained the crown of England.
2. In 2002, at 76 years of age, The
Queen was the oldest monarch to celebrate a Golden Jubilee. The youngest was
James I (James VI of Scotland) at 51 years.
3. Since 1952, The Queen has
conferred over 387,700 honours and awards.
4. The Queen has personally held
over 540 Investitures.
5. The Queen speaks fluent French
and often uses the language for Audiences and State Visits. Her Majesty does
not require an interpreter.
6. The Queen has received over 3
million items of correspondence during her reign.
7. Over the course of the reign,
around 1.1 million people have attended Garden Parties at Buckingham Palace or
the Palace of Holyroodhouse (The Queen ended Presentation Parties in 1958).
8. Over the reign, Her Majesty has
given regular Tuesday evening audiences to 10 British Prime Ministers. They
are: Winston Churchill 1951-55, Sir Anthony Eden 1955-57, Harold Macmillan
1957-63, Sir Alec Douglas-Home 1963-64, Harold Wilson 1964-70 and 1974-76,
Edward Heath 1970-74, James Callaghan 1976-79, Margaret Thatcher 1979-90, John
Major 1990-97, Tony Blair 1997-present.
9. Tony Blair is the first Prime
Minister to have been born during The Queen's reign. He was born in early May
1953 - a month before the Coronation.
10. The Queen and The Duke of
Edinburgh introduced small, informal luncheon parties at Buckingham Palace to
meet distinguished people from all professions, trades and vocations. The first
lunch was held on 11th May 1956 and the tradition continues to this day. There
are usually 6-8 guests and two members of the Household attending.
11. The Queen is patron of more than
620 charities and organisations.
12. During her reign, The Queen has
undertaken over 256 official overseas visits to 129 different countries.
13. Many of The Queen's official
tours were undertaken on the Royal Yacht Britannia. It was launched by Her
Majesty on 16 April 1953 and was commissioned for service on 7 January 1954. It
was de-commissioned in December 1997. During this time, Britannia travelled
more than a million miles on Royal and official duties.
14. The Royal Yacht Britannia was
first used by The Queen when she embarked with the Duke of Edinburgh on 1 May
1954 at Tobruk for the final stage of their Commonwealth Tour returning to the
Pool of London. The last time The Queen was on board Britannia for an official
visit was on 9 August 1997 for a visit to Arran.
15. The Queen has visited Australia
15 times, Canada 23 times, Jamaica six times and New Zealand 10 times. Her
Majesty most recently visited Australia in March 2006 to open the Commonwealth
Games in Melbourne.
16. Since her accession to the
throne in 1952, Her Majesty has visited Edinburgh nearly every year, taking up
residence in the Palace of Holyroodhouse during Holyrood Week.
17. During her reign, The
Queen has received many unusual gifts including a variety of live animals. The
more unusual animals have been placed in the care of the London zoo, among them
jaguars and sloths from Brazil, and two black beavers from Canada. The Queen
has also received gifts of pineapples, eggs, a box of snail shells, a grove of
maple trees and 7kg of prawns. Right - Gift of a Maori Feather Cape.
18. The Queen has sent around
100,000 telegrams to centenarians in the UK and the Commonwealth.
19. The Queen has sent more than
280,000 telegrams to couples in the UK and the Commonwealth celebrating their
diamond wedding (60 years) anniversary.
20. The Queen's real birthday is on
April 21, but it is celebrated officially in June.
21. The Queen has attended 34
Royal Variety performances.
22. The Queen has opened 15 bridges
in the United Kingdom during her reign.
23. The Queen has given over 91
State banquets during her reign.
24. Since 1952, The Queen has
undertaken 78 State Visits accompanied by The Duke of Edinburgh
with the most recent being to Singapore in March, 2006.
25. The Queen has launched 23 ships
in her lifetime. The first was HMS Vanguard which she launched, as Princess
Elizabeth, on November 30 1944 in Clydebank. The first ship which she launched
as Queen was Her Majesty's Yacht Britannia, which was also launched from
Clydebank.
26. The Queen and The Duke of
Edinburgh have sent about 37,500 Christmas cards during The Queen's reign.
27. The Queen has given out about
78,000 Christmas puddings to staff continuing the custom of King George V and
King George VI. In addition, The Queen gives all her staff a gift at Christmas
time.
28. Every year The Queen sends
Christmas trees to Westminster Abbey, Wellington Barracks, St Paul's Cathedral,
St Giles, Edinburgh, The Canongate Kirk, Edinburgh, Crathie Church and local
schools and churches in the Sandringham area.
29. The Queen learnt to drive in
1945 when she joined the Army.
30. The Queen was a Girl Guide
(1937) and Sea Ranger (1943).
31. Princess Elizabeth travelled on
the London Underground for the first time in May 1939 with her governess Marion
Crawford and Princess Margaret.
32. The Queen is a keen photographer
and enjoys taking photographs of her family. The Duke of York is also a keen
photographer and has taken a number of photographs of The Queen, including an
official photograph for Her Majesty's Golden Jubilee in 2002.
33. The Queen was born at 17 Bruton
St, London W1 on 21 April 1926, was christened on 29 May 1926 in the private
chapel at Buckingham Palace, and was confirmed on 28 March 1942 in the private
chapel at Windsor Castle.
34. With the birth of Prince Andrew
in 1960, The Queen became the first reigning Sovereign to have a child since
Queen Victoria, who had her youngest child, Princess Beatrice, in 1857.
35. The Queen has 30 godchildren.
36. The first football match The
Queen attended was the 1953 FA Cup Final.
37. The Queen has taken the salute
in every Trooping the Colour ceremony since the start of her reign, with the
exception of 1955, when a national rail strike forced the cancellation of the
parade.
38. The Queen has sat for 139
official portraits during her lifetime, two of which were with The Duke of
Edinburgh. The most recent sitting was for Rolf Harris (2005). Her Majesty was
just seven years old when she sat for her first portrait in 1933, which was
commissioned by her mother and painted by the Hungarian artist Philip Alexius
de László.
39. The Queen sat for the first and
only hologram portrait in 2003.
40. There have been 11 sculptures of
The Queen. The most recent was in 2005 by Miss Angela Conner for St George's
Chapel, Windsor.
41. The first 'Royal
walkabout' took place during the visit by The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh
to Australia and New Zealand in 1970. The practice was introduced to allow them
to meet a greater number of people, not simply officials and dignitaries.
42. In 1969 the first television
film about the family life of the Royal Family was made, and shown on the eve
of the Investiture of Prince Charles as Prince of Wales.
43. An important innovation during
The Queen's reign was the opening in 1962 of a new gallery at Buckingham Palace
to display items from the Royal Collection. The brainchild of The Duke of
Edinburgh, the new Queen's Gallery occupied the space of the Palace's
bomb-damaged private chapel. It was the first time that parts of the Palace had
been opened to the general public.
44. The only time The Queen has had
to interrupt an overseas tour was in 1974 during a tour of Australia and
Indonesia. The Queen was called back from Australia when a general election was
called suddenly. The Duke of Edinburgh continued the programme in Australia,
and The Queen re-joined the tour in Indonesia.
45. The Queen has opened Parliament
every year except 1959 and 1963, when she was expecting Prince Andrew and
Prince Edward respectively.
46. The Queen went on her first State
Visit as Princess Elizabeth, to South Africa with her mother and father, then
King and Queen, from February to May 1947. The tour included Rhodesia and
Bechuanaland, Swaziland and Basutoland (now Lesotho). The Princess celebrated
her 21st birthday in Cape Town. Her Majesty's first State Visit as Queen was
technically to Kenya, as King George VI died and The Queen acceded the throne
during the tour. The tour had to be abandoned.
Right - Gift of Flame Lily Brooch Rhodesia 1947.
Right - Gift of Flame Lily Brooch Rhodesia 1947.
47. The Queen's first Commonwealth
tour began on 24 November 1953, and included visits to Bermuda, Jamaica,
Panama, Fiji, Tonga, New Zealand, Australia, the Cocos Islands, Ceylon, Aden,
Uganda, Libya, Malta and Gibraltar. The total distance covered was 43,618
miles.
48. The Queen was the first British
Monarch to visit China when she visited in 1986.
49. The Queen has made a Christmas
Broadcast to the Commonwealth every year of her reign except 1969, when a
repeat of the film 'Royal Family' was shown and a written message from The Queen
issued.
50. In 1953, The Queen made the
first Christmas Broadcast from overseas, (rather than from the UK),
broadcasting live from New Zealand. The first televised broadcast was in 1957,
made live. The first pre-recorded broadcast took place in 1960 to allow
transmission around the world.
51. The Queen sent a message of
congratulations to Apollo 11 astronauts for the first moon landing on the 21st
July,1969. The message was micro-filmed and deposited on the moon in a metal
container.
52. The Queen has met the following
astronauts at Buckingham Palace:
a. The first astronaut to go into
space - Russian - Major Yuri Gagarin.
b. The first woman in space -
Russian - Mrs Valentina Tereschkova
c. The first man on the moon -
American - Neil Armstrong - and the other American astronauts, Michael Collins
and Edwin Aldrin.
53. The Queen sent her first email
in 1976 from an Army base.
54. There have been six Archbishops
of Canterbury during The Queen's reign (Archbishops Geoffrey Fisher, Michael
Ramsey, Donald Coggan, Robert Runcie, George Carey and Rowan Williams).
55. History was made in 1982 when
Pope John Paul II visited Britain, the first Pope to do so for 450 years. The
Queen, Titular Head of the Church of England, received him at Buckingham
Palace.
56. The Queen first visited a mosque
in the UK for the first time in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire in July 2002.
57. The Queen has attended 50 Royal
Maundy services during her reign at more than 39 different cathedrals. The
Queen has only missed four services - two for official tours and two for the
births of Prince Andrew and Prince Edward.
58. The Queen has owned more than 30
corgis during her reign, starting with Susan who was a present for her 18th
birthday in 1944. A good proportion of these have been direct descendants from
Susan. The Queen currently has five corgis, Emma, Linnet, Monty, Holly and
Willow.
59. The Queen also introduced a new
breed of dog known as the "dorgi" when one of Her Majesty's corgis
was mated with a dachshund named Pipkin which belonged to Princess Margaret.
The Queen currently has four dorgis, Cider, Berry, Candy and Vulcan.
60. As well as corgis and dorgis,
The Queen also breeds and trains Labradors and Cocker Spaniels at Sandringham.
There is a special Sandringham strain of black Labrador founded in 1911.
61. The Queen takes a keen
interest in horses and racing. Her Majesty's first pony was given to her by her
grandfather, King George V, when she was four years old. This was a Shetland
pony called Peggy. The Queen continues to ride at Sandringham, Balmoral and
Windsor.
62. The Queen also takes a keen
interest in horse breeding. Horses bred at the Royal studs over the last 200
years have won virtually every major race in Britain. The Queen has about 25
horses in training each season.
63. The Queen's racing colours are:
Purple body with gold braid, Scarlet sleeves and Black velvet cap with gold
fringe.
64. The Queen continues the Royal
Family's long association with racing pigeons which began in 1886 when King
Leopold II of Belgium made a gift of racing pigeons to the British Royal
Family. In 1990, one of The Queen's birds took part in the Pau race, coming
first in the Section 5th Open and was subsequently named "Sandringham
Lightning". In recognition of her interest in the sport, The Queen is
Patron of a number of racing societies, including the Royal Pigeon Racing
Association.
65. The Queen and The Duke of
Edinburgh were married on 20 November 1947 in Westminster Abbey. The
Queen's wedding dress was
designed by Sir Norman Hartnell and was woven at Winterthur Silks Limited,
Dunfermline, in the Canmore factory, using silk that had come from Chinese
silkworms at Lullingstone Castle.
66. The Queen's dressmakers over the
years have included Sir Hardy Amies, Sir Norman Hartnell, Karl-Ludwig Couture
and Maureen Rose. The Queen's milliners have been Frederick Fox, Philip
Somerville and Marie O'Regan.
67. The Queen's wedding ring
was made from a nugget of Welsh gold which came from the Clogau St David's mine
near Dolgellau. The official wedding cake was made by McVitie and Price Ltd,
using ingredients given as a wedding gift by Australian Girl Guides.
68. The Queen has an extensive
collection of jewellery, most of which are Crown Jewels, some inherited and
some gifts, including the largest pink diamond in the world. Some well known
pieces include; a brooch of diamonds forming a spray of wattle presented by the
Australian Government in 1954; and a necklace of large square cut aquamarines
and diamonds with earrings as a gift in Coronation year by the Ambassador of
Brazil, which The Queen wore on the French State visit in 2004. Right -
Gift from Australia of Wattle diamond brooch
69. The Queen has laid her wreath at
the Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday every year of her reign, except in 1959,
1961, 1963, 1968, 1983 and 1999 when she was either pregnant or overseas on an
official visit.
70. The Queen has visited the sets
of a number of popular British soap operas including Coronation Street, East
Enders and Emmerdale.
71. In 1997, The Queen launched
Buckingham Palace's first official website.
72. In 1998, The Queen introduced
"theme days" to promote and celebrate aspects of British culture. The
first theme day was "City Day" focusing on financial institutions.
Other themes have included Publishing, Broadcasting, Tourism, Emergency
Services, Maritime Day, Music, Young Achievers, British Design, and Pioneers.
73. In June, 2002, The Queen hosted
the first public concerts in the garden of Buckingham Palace to celebrate her
Golden Jubilee. The Queen attended both the classical and pop concerts. The
'Party at the Palace' pop concert was one of the most watched pop concerts in
history, attracting around 200 million viewers all over the world.
74. The Queen is the first member of
the Royal Family to be awarded a gold disc from the recording industry. 100,000
copies of the CD of the 'Party at the Palace', produced by EMI, were sold
within the first week of release.
75. The Queen hosted the first
women-only event "Women of Achievement" at Buckingham Palace in
March, 2004.
76. In November 2004, The Queen
invited the cast of Les Miserables in the West End to perform for French
President Jacques Chirac at Windsor Castle. It was the first time the cast of a
West End musical had performed at a Royal residence.
77. As a young girl, The Queen acted
in a number of Pantomimes during World War Two including playing the part of
Prince Florizel in Cinderella in 1941. These pantomimes took place every year
in the Waterloo Chamber at Windsor Castle.
78. In 2005, The Queen claimed
ownership of 88 cygnets on the river Thames. They are looked after by the Swan
Marker. The first Royal Swan Keeper was appointed around the 12th Century.
79. Technically The Queen still owns
the sturgeons, whales and dolphins in the waters around the UK. A statute from
1324, at the time of the reign of King Edward II , states that: "Also the
King shall have ... whales and sturgeons taken in the sea or elsewhere within
the realm." This statute is still valid today, and sturgeons, porpoises,
whales and dolphins are recognised as 'Fishes Royal'. When captured within
three miles of UK shores, or washed ashore either dead or alive, they may be
claimed on behalf of the Crown. Generally, when brought into port, a sturgeon
is sold in the usual way, and the purchaser, as a gesture of loyalty, requests
the honour of its being accepted by The Queen.
80. In summer 2005, The Queen opened
the first "children's trail" in the Buckingham Palace garden for the
Summer Opening.
Source: Fashion Era
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